Mein Kampf by Adolf Hitler. 702 Pages.
Mein Kampf is the autobiography and articulated worldview of one of the most consequential leaders in world history. It is also one of the most maligned and least understood texts of the 20th century. A major problem in the Anglophone world has been the poor state of English translations. Both the Mannheim and Murphy editions are poor efforts, awkwardly phrased, and replete with archaic British wording; they are simply painful to read. This new translation is clear, lucid, and highly readable—and yet true to the original. Contrary to postwar propaganda, Mein Kampf does not contain a plan for “world domination” and instead consists of the effects of World War I on Germany, a discussion of race and the “Jewish Question”, the constitutional and social make-up of a future German state, and the early struggles of the NSDAP up to 1923.
The Myth of the Twentieth Century by Alfred Rosenberg. 447 Pages.
Regarded as the second most important book to come out of Nazi Germany, Alfred Rosenberg’s Myth of the Twentieth Century is a philosophical and political map outlining the ideological background to the Nazi Party and maps out how that party viewed society, other races, religion, art, aesthetics, and the structure of the state. The “Myth” to which Rosenberg refers is to the concept of blood, which “unchains the racial world-revolution.” Rosenberg’s depiction of the world racial situation and the demand for racially homogenous states as the only method to preserve individual world cultures is fascinating. It is likely that he was hanged at Nuremberg because of this book.
Hitler’s Second Book: German Foreign Policy by Adolf Hitler. 200 Pages.
Often called Hitler’s “Secret Book,” this is the only full-length, completely unedited and correctly translated text of Hitler’s second book, written to explain National Socialist foreign policy. Dictated in 1928 to Max Annan, head of the NSDAP’s publishing house, the unedited draft manuscript was never published in Hitler’s lifetime.
A New Nobility Of Blood & Soil by R. Walther Darre. 278 Pages.
Fearsome and provocative, the slogan “Blood and Soil” speaks to the interplay between the land and the people on it—the power of a land to shape a people and the power of a people to shape a land. Richard Walther Darré of the SS was the leading “Blood and Soil” ideologist of Germany and served his people as Reich Minister of Food and Agriculture. This book, A New Nobility of Blood and Soil, was massively popular in the Third Reich and led to a strengthening of the agrarian and agriculturalist movements. Highly influential on Hitler, the principles in this book are foundational to the National Socialist worldview. This worldview held that Germany’s natural elite, its nobility of blood and soil, was the nation’s last hope against both the rapacious elite of capitalist wealth and the degenerate elite of ancient privilege. The hardworking and industrious peasant, who has no other country to call home, no riches with which to escape his duties, no international connections with which to deracinate himself, is the truly national man. His country is everything to him, and he is everything to his country, for it is on his back and by his sweat that his country is built. Thus, only from such a class of people can a new nobility arise that can combat the depravations of the modern world, with its polluted rivers, childless marriages, and the asphalt culture of city life. With no English language edition available, this essential text has been unknown to modern dissidents for far too long.
Hitler’s Table Talk by Martin Bormann. 292 Pages.
Hitler’s Table Talk consists of notes of the Führer’s casual lunch and dinnertime conversations with his close friends and colleagues assembled from the stenographic record ordered by his private secretary Martin Bormann. Copied down by adjutants and edited for accuracy by Bormann, these discussions reveal Adolf Hitler’s wartime thoughts on his enemies, friends, and a variety of topics ranging from art, his childhood years, his thoughts on religion, nature, science, technology, and a host of other topics that reveal his astonishing intellect.
The Rise Of The NSDAP by the Reichsfuhrer SS Main Office. 192 Pages.
This is the story of the rise to power of the National Socialist German Workers’ Party, from seven men in a Munich basement to absolute power over the German state. Originally published as an educational and propaganda work by the SS Main Office and the Reichsführer-SS, Heinrich Himmler, it captures the entire development of the party, from its background in the parliamentary failures of the old Empire and the chaos of the Weimar Republic, to the procession of political intrigues and plots that marked their grueling path to final victory. More than anything, it is an invaluable resource for gaining an understanding of how the political situation actually developed in Germany from 1918–1933 and dispelling the many myths about this period that persist even to this day. The German Republic before the NSDAP’s rise to power was a tangled web of factions, from the Social Democrats and the conservatives of the Centre Party to right-wing paramilitaries and conspiratorial cabals seeking everything from the restoration of the monarchy to regional secession or military dictatorship. Despite all this, the National Socialists sought only one thing: to be the one and only power in Germany. Beyond just a dry historical treatment, however, The Rise of the NSDAP is a case study in the importance of loyalty, solidarity, and dogged determination in achieving a seemingly impossible goal. The final victory of the NSDAP was due, not so much to something as simple as good propaganda or willingness to meet violence with violence, but to a relentless refusal to accept anything short of their ultimate objective, a willingness to sacrifice anything for their ideals and to weather the storms of fortune until they would be achieved.
Germany’s Hitler: The Only Authorized Biography by Heinz A. Heinz. 234 Pages.
One of the most suppressed English-language books ever to emerge from Germany: the 1938 authorized biography of Adolf Hitler. This professional journalist/author interviewed Hitler’s old school friends, army colleagues, landlords, his jailer, and early party comrades to provide an unprecedented insight into the German leader’s background and pre-war policies.
Conquering Berlin by Wilfrid Bade. 183 Pages.
Berlin: Capital of the Reich. In the heyday of the decadent Weimar Republic, the political heart of Germany is a Red fortress with streets overrun by communist gangs. While the brown-shirted SA-Men are ascendant in other parts of the country, only the bravest dare set foot in Berlin’s working-class neighborhoods. But the SA is awash with brave men willing to sacrifice everything to bring about their Third Reich. Spurred on by their love of Germany and by the charismatic Dr. Goebbels, the Berlin NSDAP rise from a handful of men in a dingy cellar to the toughest group of fighting men under the SA banner. Conquering Berlin tells the inside story, through the eyes of the humble worker Schulz, of their struggle to retake the Red City. From barroom brawls to street demonstrations, from moments of happiness to devastating defeats, the SA risk life and limb to wrest the German people from the clutches of dirty cops and Bolshevik assassins. First published by Wilfrid Bade in 1933, Conquering Berlin was banned in the Soviet occupation zone, the author dying in a prison camp in Lithuania.
In His Own Words: Essential Speeches by Adolf Hitler. 276 Pages.
The subject of this book hardly needs an introduction. It is doubtful that there is any nation on earth that is not familiar with his colossal and provocative reputation. Adolf Hitler rose from the ranks as an unknown soldier, through the political chaos of the Weimar period, to take command of Germany and embark on a twelve-year odyssey of both great triumphs and great tragedy. Time magazine named him Man of the Year in 1938, but in terms of personal impact on the course of history, he may have been Man of the Century. In the popular imagination, it is impossible to disassociate the man from his emphatic and passionate public addresses. As a result, Hitler’s oratory is often credited with his victory in the competition for political influence in the early years of the NSDAP’s struggle for power. And yet, competent translations of many of his influential speeches have largely been neglected, and those that do exist often do not do justice to the original material. In His Own Words is not only a collection of new and improved translations of some of Hitler’s most important speeches, but also includes original research to provide historical context and information about the speeches themselves. While not a complete collection of every speech he ever made, (such a collection would span thousands of pages at minimum) the essential speeches translated in this edition will provide the English reader with an unparalleled understanding of how Hitler used his oratory to become the most recognizable political figure of the modern age.
Hitler On The Jews by Thomas Dalton. 260 Pages.
That Adolf Hitler spoke out against the Jews is banal in the extreme. But the fact that this is the first book ever to compile his remarks on the Jews is nothing short of astonishing. The reason for this is clear: Those in positions of influence in the media, government, and universities have an incentive to present a simplistic and highly sanitized picture of Hitler as an insane Jew-hater, a blood-thirsty tyrant, and the embodiment of evil. But this caricaturization only works if the public is presented with a carefully controlled and manipulated view of Hitler’s take on the Jews. His real words and his actual ideas are far more complex and sophisticated than most authorities would like you to think. But this fact does not suit those in power today. They need the public to think of him as a semi-literate, foaming-at-the-mouth demagogue. And to accomplish this goal, they need to ensure that no one reads his actual words. Until now, they have succeeded. Here, one can read nearly every idea that Hitler put forth about the Jews, in considerable detail and in full context.
Hitler by Wyndham Lewis. 160 Pages.
Wyndham Lewis was a British novelist, painter, essayist, and polemicist approaching politics as an aesthetic discipline. His 1931 work Hitler was written after his visit to Germany that year and highlights the charged atmosphere and uneasy tension that permeated Berlin. Bringing his wit and humor to analyze a country on the eve of revolution, Lewis argues that in contemporary “emergency conditions” Hitler may truly be the best option for Germans. Branded a National Socialist sympathizer, Wyndham Lewis’s reputation never recovered from the release of this book. Throughout the 1930’s Wyndham Lewis persisted in his advocacy of what is now termed “appeasement”. During the war, he fled to the United States and Canada, all the while working to distance himself from his 1931 writings. He returned home to England after the war, and went blind in 1951, but kept writing critiques and fiction of such quality that he had a brief renaissance of popularity before his death in 1957. Despite this, the shadow of Hitler continues to haunt the legacy of Wyndham Lewis.
What The World Rejected by Friedrich Stieve. 97 Pages.
Written by Germany’s foremost diplomatic historian of the early twentieth century, this work maps out all the numerous times that Adolf Hitler made unconditional offers of peace to all the nations of Europe—and how the major anti-German belligerents, France and Britain, turned down these offers each and every time.
Into The Darkness by T. Lothrop Stoddard. 205 Pages.
A leading American journalist travels to Nazi Germany in December 1939, arriving in wartime Germany where all the lights are blacked out in preparation for an English or French bombing campaign. Stoddard’s provocatively titled book refers to the eerie experience he felt of first encountering this total blackout. Stoddard was sent to report on wartime conditions in Nazi Germany—at a time before the U.S. became involved in the war.
Streicher, Rosenberg, & The Jews by Thomas Dalton. 230 Pages.
The Holocaust was certainly one of the most consequential events of the past 100 years. And yet, the truth of that event is far different than commonly portrayed. Since the mid-1970s, it has come under sustained attack by a group of individuals known as Holocaust revisionists—to the point where, today, the story lay in ruins. Virtually every aspect of the standard account, we now realize, has serious and irreconcilable flaws. As a result, the actual Jewish death toll is far below the claimed figure of 6 million—likely in the range of half a million. And yet, despite this intense and highly successful revisionist work, the orthodox version continues to dominate in the Western world. To fully understand this striking situation, we need to go back to the beginnings—to the origins of the conventional Holocaust story. And this takes us to Nuremberg. Immediately after World War Two, the Allies initiated an extensive series of war-crimes trials against the Nazi hierarchy. The most famous of these occurred at Nuremberg, and the single most important trial was known as the International Military Tribunal, or IMT. Running for roughly one year, it tried 24 leading Nazis, including such major figures as Herman Göring and Martin Bormann. But the most interesting men on trial were two with a special connection to the “Jewish Question”: Alfred Rosenberg and Julius Streicher. The case against them, and their personal testimony, examined for the first time nearly all major aspects of the Holocaust story: the “extermination” thesis, the gas chambers, the gas vans, the shootings in the East, and the “6 million”. The truth of the Holocaust has been badly distorted for decades by the Jewish powers that be. Here we have the rare opportunity to hear firsthand from two prominent figures in Nazi Germany. Their voices, and their verbatim transcripts from the IMT, lend some much-needed clarity to the situation.
Why We Fight by the Wehrmacht Office. 206 Pages.
The book Why We Fight was intended to be an intellectual guide for the military officers’ ideological orientation and for the political education and training of the troops under their command. The officer had to be an active pioneer in the field of ideology and be capable of demonstrating to his soldiers the National Socialist worldview. Political training was just as crucial to the war as weapons training.
Germany Speaks by Joachim Von Ribbentrop. 236 Pages.
In the year immediately preceding the outbreak of World War II, the German foreign office launched an unprecedented campaign in Britain to explain the inner workings of Nazi Germany. The high point of this effort was this book, a four-part set of 21 essays by leading party and state officials, each explaining in detail the practical implementation and rationale of their policies. Contributors include Otto Dietrich, Fritz Todt, Robert Ley, R. Walther Darré, Wilhelm Frick, Ritter Von Epp, and many others.
Goebbels On The Jews by Thomas Dalton. 280 Pages.
From the age of 26 until his death in 1945, Joseph Goebbels kept a near-daily diary. In it he recorded significant events of the day, along with his thoughts and opinions on a variety of topics, most notably the Jewish policy of the Third Reich. Here we get a detailed and unprecedented look at the attitudes of one of the highest-ranking men in Nazi Germany. As such, these entries have a profound effect on our understanding of the Holocaust. Nowhere in the diary does Goebbels discuss any Hitler order to kill the Jews, nor is there any reference to extermination camps, gas chambers, or systematic mass-murder. Goebbels acknowledges that Jews did indeed die by the thousands, but the range and scope of killings evidently fall far short of the claimed figure of six million. This book contains, for the first time, every significant diary entry relating to the Jews or Jewish policy. There are 178 such entries in all. Entries are covered in chronological order, along with additional commentary and contextual remarks. Also included are partial or full citations of 10 major essays by Goebbels on the Jews, which bring important clarity to our understanding of his views. What emerges is a picture of an intelligent and highly-educated man who wanted the best for his German people, and who therefore had to grapple with what he saw as the primary threat to their wellbeing—the Jews.
Life In The Reich by Mike Walsh. 120 Pages.
The standard of living and quality of life in Hitler’s Third Reich was far superior to elsewhere in the developed world. Ordinary German workers enjoyed a lifestyle previously reserved for the upper classes of the West. Hitler’s Germany led the world in fashion, medicine, cinema, lifestyle, manufacturing, transport infrastructure, public facilities, cutting-edge science, healthcare, and education. For good reason, the Germans were the cheeriest people on earth. The claim that this was achieved through investment in militarism is absurd. Prosperity in the Reich set an example that damns the hideous failures of the mutually supportive capitalist and communist systems. A taboo topic for media and palace publishers, Life in the Reich by Mike Walsh was removed by Amazon because it dared to show Hitler’s Germany as it was and not as the propagandists would have us believe it was.
Germany’s War by John Wear. 514 Pages.
Establishment historians characterize National Socialist Germany as a uniquely barbaric, vile, and criminal regime that was totally responsible for starting World War II and carrying out some of the most heinous war crimes in world history. Germany’s War by John Wear refutes this characterization of Germany, bringing history into accord with the facts.
Life Of A Leader by Hermann Goring. 195 Pages.
A testimony to his personality, Life Of A Leader was written with affection and admiration by his closest colleagues, offering a rare glimpse into the private life of Adolf Hitler. Contributors include Dr. Joseph Goebbels, Julius Schreck, Rudolf Hess, Dr. Otto Dietrich, Hermann Goring, and many others.
Truth For Germany by Udo Walendy. 479 Pages.
For seven decades, the mainstream historical establishment has insisted that World War II was started by Germany. But what facts exist to support this seemingly unchallengeable hypothesis? In Truth for Germany, the myth of Germany’s guilt for fomenting the Second World War is refuted by famed German historian Udo Walendy. Future historical research will amplify the facts compiled in this book, but mainstream historians can no longer claim they are non-existent or irrelevant.
This Time The World by George Lincoln Rockwell. 321 Pages.
In this semi-autobiographical book, the godfather of American National Socialism tells the story about how he came to embrace National Socialism and the words of Adolf Hitler. After retiring as a Commander in the Navy, George Lincoln Rockwell began formulating his ideas and formed the American Nazi Party in 1959.
Memoirs by Alfred Rosenberg. 147 Pages.
Here are the sensational memoirs of Alfred Rosenberg, the Third Reich’s leading ideologue, minister of the Occupied Eastern Territories and author of The Myth of the 20th Century, written while in prison at Nuremberg. These memoirs contain a no-holds-barred overview of his political life, from the time of his earliest involvement in the NSDAP, right up to the Nuremberg Trials.
The Lightning & The Sun by Savitri Devi. 199 Pages.
A classic philosophical work about the historical inevitability of cultural decay and rebirth, written by one of Adolf Hitler's most devoted admirers. Savitri Devi couches her arguments in metaphor, using "lightning" to refer to forces of destruction and "sun" to refer to building in accordance with nature's eternal laws. Both are necessary, says Devi, since to build the pure and new one must first sweep away the rotting debris of the corrupt old order. Violence, per se, has no moral assignment, it's either worth its while or not, depending on what it aims for. For illustration, the author examines in detail the lives of three figures from history: Akhnaton, Genghis Khan, and Adolf Hitler. She argues that we are at the end of a cycle of history in which corruption and lies prevail over honor and truth, and that the time is ripe for the storm of violence that will precede the next golden age.
Michael by Joseph Goebbels. 178 Pages.
Dr. Joseph Goebbels, best known for his role as the leader of the Berlin NSDAP and later as the chief publicist for the National Socialist government of Germany, was a man of humble beginnings. Unable to serve in World War I due to a deformed foot, the young Goebbels dedicated himself to academic studies, performing well and eventually earning a Doctorate of Philology from the prestigious University of Heidelberg. Like most Germans in the years following the war, Goebbels was underemployed and aimless for a time, during which he continued to pursue his love of literature. What emerged from this time was Michael, a novel that merged his own experiences with those of his close friends and the styles of the writers who had made a profound impression upon him in his formative years. Michael follows the story of a soldier returning from the war, experiencing the highs and lows of the rapid changes emerging in the new Germany, as told through a series of diary entries. Ruminations on politics and philosophy, the war, romance, art, and culture, all combine to offer a piercing insight into the author’s soul and the world in which he lived. Goebbels was, beyond his role as a political figure, a man deeply immersed in an aesthetic view of life and the role of the German people.
Hitler Democrat by General Leon Degrelle. 551 Pages.
What some people think they “know” about Hitler and his era is nothing close to the truth. In Hitler Democrat the other side of the story is told, as only the great General Leon Degrelle of the Waffen-SS could tell it. This tremendous work is unlike any other book about World War II—and Adolf Hitler—available anywhere on the face of the planet today.
Hermann Goering The Man & His Work by Erich Gritzbach. 279 Pages.
This, the only official biography of Hermann Goering, was a bestseller in Germany and in the English-speaking world when first published in 1938. Written by one of Goering’s senior staff members, Erich Gritzbach, this book details the many astonishing services which Goering rendered the German state. Although it is well known that Goering recreated the German Luftwaffe once the shackles of the Versailles Treaty were shaken off, his other valuable achievements are less famous. He served as prime minister of Prussia, President of the Reichstag, helped resuscitate Lufthansa, and in his role as imperial master of the hunt, helped craft legislation to create forest reserves to protect animals.
The Forced War by David L. Hoggan. 716 Pages.
Based on the author’s Harvard University doctoral dissertation, The Forced War is a masterful study of the origins and causes of WWII. This well-researched historical analysis delves into the official diplomatic correspondence of various participants, primarily of Great Britain, France, Poland, and National Socialist Germany. The roots of the conflict are traced from the Treaty of Versailles to the final declaration of War by Great Britain and France upon Germany, along with the “Allies” repeated refusal to enter into peaceful negotiations to prevent the war from expanding beyond a local border dispute. Written in 1961, this book will forever change your view of how world leaders discuss peace, and how they plan for war.
With Hitler On The Road To Power by Otto Dietrich. 106 Pages.
This work, written by Adolf Hitler’s Chief of Press in 1934, details the three tumultuous election campaign years from 1930 through to the coming to power of the NSDAP in January 1933. The author formed part of Hitler’s inner circle and campaign staff during this period—which included 6 full elections in 2.5 years—and later went on to become the Chancellor’s Press Officer.
The First Soldier by Stephen G. Fritz. 480 Pages.
A leading expert reexamines history to offer a stunningly original portrait of Hitler as a competent military commander and strategist. After World War II, numerous German generals published memoirs claiming that their country’s brilliant military leadership had been undermined by the Führer’s erratic decision making. The author upends this characterization of Hitler as an ill-informed fantasist and demonstrates the ways in which his strategy was coherent and even competent. While his generals did sometimes object to Hitler’s tactics and operational direction, they often made the same errors in judgment and were in agreement regarding larger strategic and political goals. A necessary volume for understanding the influence of World War I on Hitler’s thinking, this work is also an eye-opening reappraisal of major events like the invasion of Russia and the battle for Normandy.
When Money Dies by Adam Fergusson. 288 Pages.
When Money Dies is the classic history of what happens when a nation's currency depreciates beyond recovery. In 1923, with its currency effectively worthless, the German Weimar Republic was all but reduced to a barter economy. Expensive cigars, artworks, and jewels were routinely exchanged for staples such as bread; a cinema ticket could be bought for a lump of coal, and a bottle of paraffin for a silk shirt. People watched helplessly as their life savings disappeared and their loved ones starved to death. Germany's finances descended into chaos, with severe social unrest in its wake. Germany in 1923 provides a vivid, compelling, sobering moral tale.